What happened?

According to Politico, House Administration Committee Chairman Gregg Harper (R-Miss.) told GOP lawmakers in a closed-door meeting on Friday that only one House office had used the congressional Office of Compliance account in the last five years to settle a sexual harassment complaint. He said that settlement was for $84,000.

Politico reported that the lawmaker in question is Farenthold.

According to the report, Lauren Greene, Farenthold’s former communications director, sued him in 2014 over gender discrimination, sexual harassment, and creating a hostile work environment.

Greene claimed in the lawsuit that another Farenthold staffer told her the lawmaker had “sexual fantasies” and “wet dreams” about her. She said the lawmaker also “regularly drank to excess” and told her in 2014 that he was “estranged from his wife and had not had sex with her in years.”

She said after she objected to the comments Farenthold and the male staffer had made to her, the congressman terminated her employment. Farenthold denied the allegations, according to the report.

Greene filed a lawsuit but later dropped the case after the parties reached a private settlement.

In a statement to Politico, Farenthold said, “While I 100% support more transparency with respect to claims against members of Congress, I can neither confirm nor deny that settlement involved my office as the Congressional Accountability Act prohibits me from answering that question.”

Amid a national wave of sexual harassment and assault allegations, the Office of Compliance account has come under fire as a slush fund enabling lawmakers to settle such claims with taxpayer funds.

NBC News reported that the office has made more than $17 million worth of payments to settle workplace disputes over the last 20 years, “but it’s unknown — other than Farenthold’s $84,000 payment — how much of that is for sexual harassment claims over that period of time.”

While defending then-Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in the wake of the infamous "Access Hollywood" tape last year, Farenthold said he'd still "consider" voting for Trump if the candidate said on tape that he liked to rape women. The congressman later apologized.